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Hello, my husband just won a case in court to get SSD and desicion was bench on same day of the hearing. We still haven't received the documents to go to SS office and see what benefits he will get. We have been married 3 years and have a child. Im currently not working because i care for my son who has mild autism. We have a doubt. He tried working this year for 7 months so he was on a trial period to test his working skills and earned some income this year. can we file taxes or that would put his SSD case on review? We have waited 2 years for this and he dont wanna risk it. But we need the money on the other hand. JUdge saw he worked 7 months this year,so i assume it wouldnt affect him. Any advice would help.

2006-10-25 02:04:57 · 5 answers · asked by mom_princess77 5 in Business & Finance Taxes United States

5 answers

You can File Income Tax For his total earnings at his Job. Soicial Security will issue him "Back Pay" for time Unable to work (TAX FREE). He won his case, BELIEVE ME social security is aware of his earnings this year, as they are submitted Quarterly from employer. Amount of Monthly income depends on his Average Lifetime Earnings. (Believe1250.00 is MAX currently)

2006-10-25 02:21:45 · answer #1 · answered by peaelle 1 · 0 0

Wait until you get your tax book. It will show what AGI (annual gross income) with his amount of dependents have to file taxes on. IF YOU OWE TAXES, YOU MOST CERTAINLY DO HAVE TO FILE A TAX RETURN. If you dont owe taxes, call the Social Security Office hotline and find out. When I worked at Social Security (many the year ago), a disabled person was allowed to see if he could work for 9 months w/o losing any of the money Social Security had paid out.

2006-10-25 03:08:35 · answer #2 · answered by bettyswestbrook 4 · 0 0

Whether to file taxes depends on how much he made during the period he was working. If SSD knew about it, and it was before their decision, shouldn't affect the SSD but if you have an attorney for that, you might ask him/her.

Good luck.

2006-10-25 04:11:23 · answer #3 · answered by Judy 7 · 0 0

yes, if he worked this year he has to file taxes. would you rather file them now and risk getting your ssd lowered a little, or pay big fines for not filing with the big bad IRS? lol don't worry about it. Since the judge saw that he worked, and still granted ssd, he will still get it, altho it might be a little lower than you expected since he had income this year.

2006-10-25 02:13:23 · answer #4 · answered by zoe and skylar's mommy 4 · 0 1

You document taxes looking on your finished earnings till you're eligible for specific advantages/tax credit wherein case it quite is on your benefit to document. in the adventure that your in easy terms earnings is from ssd then you quite in all likelihood no longer required to document.

2016-12-28 04:33:14 · answer #5 · answered by langhorne 3 · 0 0

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